.223 is the smallest you can use for anything that is bobcat sized and up in New Brunswick.
page six in your reg book, any centerfire. there is no further restrictions when hunting big game.
.223 is the smallest you can use for anything that is bobcat sized and up in New Brunswick.
A .223 is more deadly in the hands of an "expert hunter" than a .30/06 is in the hands of an "incompetent boob..."
This is the most intelligent statement in this entire thread.
It is simply a matter of respect, not ballistics... Don't choose a weapon the will "squeak by," choose one that will be decisively effective.
Having said that... A .223 is more deadly in the hands of an "expert hunter" than a .30/06 is in the hands of an "incompetent boob..."
If you choose the lesser weapon, then do your part and become the expert hunter....
Respectfully submitted.
Why not a 243. Asking about a .223 for deer use [B]is going to open up a big can of worms here[/B]. Ever try different bullets with different weights in your 270 in order to save meat?
^^^^^ Good reply. I agree 243 min. PLEASE, no more opening cans of worms on this 223 for Deer subject! .223 is not a suitable humane cartridge for Deer of any weight in my opnion, no matter how "shot placement is preached" by the super shot placement preachers, of which there are so an abundant of them on this site! Not everyone is a super shot placement shooter, so please leave it alone. If you can do it, so be it, do it and shut the F-up and do what you do! Don't encourage other's to do it! There are many more and much more suitable cartridges for the job! I never heard of this karma thing before and about what they all say of late, but I'm just learning a little more about what they mean, so lets just say, well, you figure out what I'm trying to saying here, something like here's hoping the balance the karma scales happens with the 223 Deer shooter's.Luck to ya!
Ever shot a small Island deer with a 223?
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